Department for Work and Pensions

Employment and Support Allowance

Sarah Newton: This Written Statement is a further update to the House on progress in correcting historic ESA underpayments and paying arrears. The Department began work to assess cases in December 2017. For that stage of the exercise we expect to review around 320,000 cases, of which around 105,000 are likely to be due arrears. We now have a team of over 400 staff working through these cases and have paid around £120m in arrears. We expect to complete the vast majority of this part of the exercise by April 2019, and have to date completed all cases where an individual is terminally ill and responded to the review, thereby ensuring they receive due priority. The announcement in July, to pay cases back to the point of conversion requires us to review an additional 250,000 cases, of which we estimate around 75,000 could be due arrears. We will undertake this work through the course of 2019. We now have a team of over 400 staff working through these cases, with a further 400 due to join the team through October and November, and will be assigning more staff to review the additional 250,000 cases. This will enable us to complete this important activity at pace. The Department is publishing an ad hoc statistical publication today setting out further detail on the progress it has made in processing cases and revised estimates of the impacts of this exercise, including details of the number of claimants due arrears and the amounts likely to be paid. This will be published on Gov.uk.There are currently around 2.3million working-age people on Employment and Support Allowance. In 2018/19 £54 billion will be been spent on benefits to support disabled people and people with health conditions this year which is over 6% of all Government spending and a record high. A Frequently Asked Question guide will also be will be deposited in the House library for further information.


This statement has also been made in the House of Lords: 
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Ministry of Justice

Civil Liability Bill

Rory Stewart: I have today published a written submission outlining the Government’s analysis of how the English Votes for English Laws principle in accordance with the application of Standing Order 83L, relates to the Government amendment tabled for Commons Report Stage of the Civil Liability Bill. The department’s assessment is that the amendment does not change the territorial application of the Bill. The analysis holds if the Government amendment be accepted. I have deposited a copy of the submission in the libraries of the House.


This statement has also been made in the House of Lords: 
HLWS986